Hi everyone,
I was doing some practising with Unix and accidentally created a file with the name --------------------
Yeah, it was UNINTENTIONALLY. I tried removing it various ways like
rm '--------------'
rm '-.*'
and all other sorts, but Unix keeps detecting that as an option stuff...
... (2 Replies)
i'm a relative newbie to unix (i'm on OSX) and i have a specific problem i'm tripped up on:
i'm piping the output of top (in log format) into an awk command which formats the information (and eventually will send it out continuously via udp/osc to another app). my problem is with what comes up... (4 Replies)
I'm wrting a program which needs to get the following information of a sever by calling some lib fuctions or system calls, so can anybody help to tell me those function names or where I can find the description of them ?
CPU usage
Memory usage
Load procs per min
Swap usage
Page I/O
Net I/O... (1 Reply)
is there anyway to make while run a command faster than per second?
timed=60
while
do
command
sleep 1
done
i need something that can run a script for me more than one time in one second. can someone help me out here? (3 Replies)
I'm making a program that you input the month and year, and it creates a calender for that month of that year. This is my largest project yet, and I broke it up into several source files.
cal.c
#include "cal.h"
#include <stdio.h>
main() {
int month, year;
scanf("%d %d", &month,... (3 Replies)
I'm not sure if the problem I'm seeing is an artifact of sed or simply a beginner's mistake. Here's the problem: I want to add a zero-width space following each underscore between XML tags. For example, if I had the following xml:
<MY_BIG_TAG>This_is_a_test</MY_BIG_TAG>
It should look like... (8 Replies)
what is wrong with the below script:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#!/bin/bash
echo "Setting JrePath..."
grep -w "export JrePath" /etc/profile
Export_Status=$?
if
echo "JrePath declared"
elif
echo "JrePath not declared"
echo... (4 Replies)
Our comp-operator has come across a peculiar ‘feature'. We have this directory where we save all the reports that were generated for a particular department for only one calendar year. Currently there are 45,869 files. When the operator tried to backup that drive it started to print a flie-listing... (3 Replies)
Solaris 10 10/09 s10s_u8wos_08a SPARC 16cpus 128MB, uptime 150+ days,
2 db zones (Oracle 9 & 10), 3 application zones.
This is from a system that was literally crawling, 60 seconds to execute a
single command. I had to reboot to clear it. Data is from runs of
prstat and top, and iostat. ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jim mcnamara
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
xpacmdnew
xpacmdnew(3) SAORD Documentation xpacmdnew(3)NAME
XPACmdNew - create a new XPA public access point for commands
SYNOPSIS
#include <xpa.h>
XPA XPACmdNew(char *class, char *name);
DESCRIPTION
Create a new XPA public access point for commands that will share a common identifier class:name. Enter this access point into the XPA name
server, so that it can be accessed by external processes. XPACmdNew() returns an XPA struct.
It often is more convenient to have one public access point that can manage a number of commands, rather than having individual access
points for each command. For example, it is easier to command the ds9 image display using:
echo "colormap I8" | xpaset ds9
echo "scale log" | xpaset ds9
echo "file foo.fits" | xpaset ds9
then to use:
echo "I8" | xpaset ds9_colormap
echo "log" | xpaset ds9_scale
echo "foo.fits" | xpaset ds9_file
In the first case, the commands remain the same regardless of the target XPA name. In the second case, the command names must change for
each instance of ds9. That is, if a second instance of ds9 called DS9 were running, it would be commanded either as:
echo "colormap I8" | xpaset DS9
echo "scale log" | xpaset DS9
echo "file foo.fits" | xpaset DS9
or as:
echo "I8" | xpaset DS9_colormap
echo "log" | xpaset DS9_scale
echo "foo.fits" | xpaset DS9_file
Thus, in cases where a program is going to manage many commands, it generally is easier to define them as commands associated with the
XPACmdNew() routine, rather than as separate access points using XPANew().
When XPACmdNew() is called, only the class:name identifier is specified. Each sub-command is subsequently defined using the XPACmdAdd()
routine.
SEE ALSO
See xpa(7) for a list of XPA help pages
version 2.1.14 June 7, 2012 xpacmdnew(3)